Court appears likely to side with Trump administration on rights of asylum seekers
Court appears likely to side with Trump administration on rights of asylum seekers
The Supreme Court on Tuesday appeared likely to uphold the federal governmentâs policy of systematically turning back asylum seekers before they can reach the U.S. border with Mexico. During roughly 80 minutes of oral arguments in Noem v. Al Otro Lado, a majority of justices seemed to agree with the Trump administration that the policy does not violate a federal law allowing noncitizens to apply for asylum when they âarrive[] in the United States.â
Under U.S. law, noncitizens can apply for asylum â a form of legal protection for people who fear persecution or harm in their own countries â either when they are âphysically present in the United Statesâ or when they âarrive[] in the United States.â Noncitizens who arrive at a port of entry, an officially designated site to enter the country, such as an airport or a land crossing, and indicate that they want to seek asylum are inspected and processed. That is, they are screened by border officials and then channeled into the asylum system, which may include either an interview with an asylum officer or proceedings in immigration court.
The policy at the center of the dispute â known as âmeteringâ â was adopted almost 10 years ago in response to a surge in the number of Haitian immigrants seeking asylum in San Ysidro, a port of entry outside San Diego. To implement it, officials from the Customs and Border Patrol agency stood along the U.S.-Mexico border and turned back noncitizens without valid travel documents, including asylum seekers, before they could enter the United States. In 2017, the government extended that policy to all ports of entry across the U.S. border with Mexico, and it was formalized in a memorandum in 2018.
Al Otro Lado, Inc., an immigrant rights group, and 13 asylum seekers went to federal court in southern California to challenge the policy. A majority of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit agreed with them that, for purposes of applying for asylum, noncitizens who were turned away from ports of entry before they could cross the border had âarrived inâ the United States.
After the court of appeals turned down the federal governmentâs request to reconsider the case, the Trump administration went to the Supreme Court, which agreed last fall to weigh in.
Representing the Trump administration at Tuesdayâs oral argument, Assistant to the U.S. Solicitor General Vivek Suri told the justices that, under the challengersâ reading of the law at the center of the case, the phrase âarrives in the United Statesâ would mean âstopped outside the United States.â Such an interpretation, he argued, âdefies the statutory text. You canât arrive in the United States while youâre still standing in Mexico.â Moreover, Suri continued, the governmentâs position is supported by the Supreme Courtâs 1993 decision in Sale v. Haitian Centers Council, holding that the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and federal immigration law do not apply to noncitizens outside the United States â there, to Haitian refugees on the high seas attempting to reach the United States. If Congress wanted to deviate from the âterritorial approachâ outlined in Sale when it enacted the âarrives inâ language three years later, Suri stressed, âit would have said so. It didnât.â
Representing the challengers, Kelsi Corkran countered that in the Refugee Act of 1980, Congress created a legislative scheme to track the United Statesâ obligations under international treaties to avoid sending refugees back to countries where they would be persecuted. Those obligations, she said, extend to noncitizens arriving at the U.S. border to seek asylum. The governmentâs interpretation of the law at the center of the case, she contended, âisolates the word âinâ at the expense of making the rest of the statute nonsensical.â Moreover, she added, for more than three decades, U.S. government regulations have acknowledged that noncitizens attempting to enter the country are entitled to be inspected and processed.
Justice Clarence Thomas asked both lawyers about international law and its bearing on the dispute before the court on Tuesday. Suri reiterated that, as the court made clear in Sale, the U.N. Convention did not apply outside the United States. But even if it did apply, he continued, what the convention bars is âreturning someone to a foreign country,â which the metering policy doesnât do.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor was skeptical that the governmentâs interpretation did not run afoul of the United Statesâ obligations under international treaties. The courtâs decision in Sale, she told Suri, âvery clearly says that U.S. asylum ⌠protections apply to those who reside in or have arrived at the border of the United States.â
Like Sotomayor, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was sympathetic to the challengers. She focused on what she characterized as the âpractical implicationsâ of the governmentâs reading, and in particular on what she saw as a disparate impact that Congress could not have intended. Under the governmentâs interpretation, she noted, someone who âwants to do everything by the bookâ in seeking asylum but is turned away when she approaches the border would not have her request considered at all, but âsomeone who manages to enter the United States unlawfully ⌠and requests asylum gets their application entertained[.] That doesnât seem to me to make any sense,â Jackson concluded.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh was less sympathetic to this point. He suggested that the potentially inequitable effects of a ruling for the Trump administration should not factor into the courtâs thinking at all. Instead, he told Corkran, âthe only issue before us is trying to figure out what âarrives inâ means.â
Jackson raised another issue: whether the court should reach the merits of the dispute at all, when the government rescinded the policy more than four years ago. If the government doesnât have a âconcrete planâ to reinstate it, she queried, how do the justices even have the authority to review the lower courtâs decision?
Suri responded that the question of whether the dispute is moot â that is, no longer a live controversy â âturns on whether the Court can grant any effectual relief whatsoever to the prevailing party.â And in this case, he said, some of the orders that the district court issued are still in effect, including âa class-wide declaration saying we can never engage in metering at the southern border.â
Jacksonâs efforts to have the case tossed out based on the idea that the policy is no longer in effect did not seem to get any real traction with her colleagues. Justice Amy Coney Barrett, for example, later told Suri that when she âasked if the administration intended to reinstate the metering policy,â she âdidnât intend to suggest that it was formally moot.â
Justice Elena Kagan focused on the text of the statute, telling Suri that under the governmentâs interpretation it has a âmassive superfluity ⌠problemâ: if the phrase âarrives in the United Statesâ means that the noncitizen must be in the United States, but another phrase in the same law indicates that it applies to noncitizens who are âphysically present in the United States,â then the âstatute ends up saying, essentially,â Kagan suggested, âany alien who is in the United States or who is in the United States.â
Justice Samuel Alito took a different approach to the text, questioning whether the challengersâ interpretation was consistent with its language. If the challengers compared a noncitizenâs arrival in the United States to âknocking at the door,â he told Corkran, â[d]o you think someone who comes to the front door of a house and knocks at the door has arrived âinâ the house? The person may have arrived âatâ the house.â
Several of the courtâs conservative justices also questioned how the challengersâ interpretation would work from a logistical and spatial perspective. As Barrett put it, if the phrase âarrives in the United Statesâ does not involve actually crossing the border into the United States, âwhat is the magic thing or the dispositive thing that weâre looking for where we say, ah, now that person ⌠arrives in the United States?â
Corkran responded that someone âarrives in the United States ⌠when they are at the threshold of the portâs entrance about to step over.â But when the metering policy is in effect, she said, âthat process of arriving is interrupted by the border officer physically blocking them from completing the arrival such that the person never arrived.â
Justice Neil Gorsuch pressed Corkran, asking her to explain why someone in a line to enter the port wouldnât fall under the âarrives inâ language. âI mean,â he said, âif the whole point is to make sure that people who are attempting to get into the country have the opportunity to file asylum claims and theyâve made it all the way, why does it matter whoâs second in line?â
Chief Justice John Roberts also grappled with the line issue, asking Corkran whether it matters âhow many people are processing the arrivalsâ at the port of entry or âhow quickly the lineâs going to move.â âI mean,â he said, âit strikes me as a very factual question.â
A decision in the case is expected by late June or early July.
Posted in Court News, Featured, Merits Cases
Cases: Noem v. Al Otro Lado
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